Showing posts with label customs entry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label customs entry. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Charlotte Regional Partnership Named Grantee for FTZ 57

The Charlotte Regional Partnership has become the grantee and administrator for Foreign Trade Zone 57. Although designated "Mecklenburg County," FTZ 57 extends beyond the county's borders, including sites in Alexander, Cabarrus and Catawba counties.
Charlotte Regional Partnership Named Grantee for FTZ 57
The N.C. Department of Commerce requested that the public/private economic development organization provide the zone's oversight, so there was more direct regional involvement. Although FTZ 57 is the oldest in the state, it was the only one of the six North Carolina foreign trade zones that wasn't under local control.

"Although we always have promoted the FTZ as one of our regional assets, as the zone's administrator, we can more directly market and grow the foreign trade zone, as we work with existing industry and recruit new businesses to Charlotte USA," said Ronnie Bryant, Charlotte Regional Partnership president and chief executive officer.

Foreign trade zones offer tax and duty advantages to the existing industry and serve as an incentive to attract companies. Since FTZs are legally outside U.S. Customs territory, merchandise from anywhere in the world may enter a foreign trade zone without a formal customs entry or the payment of customs duties or government excise taxes.

Foreign trade zones can be a building or just a room, but they must be within 90 miles of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection port of entry. FTZ 57 includes 16 general purpose sites for public use, as well as two subzones that are company exclusive. Several additional sites are pending approval by the U.S. Foreign Trade Zones Board.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Expansion Sought for Louisiana's FTZ #124

An application has been submitted to the Foreign-Trade Zones Board by the Port of South Louisiana, grantee of FTZ #124, requesting special-purpose subzone status for the barite milling facility of Excalibur Minerals LLC, located in New Iberia, Louisiana. It was formally filed on May 6, 2009.

The Excalibur facility is used for activities related to the milling (heating, grinding, crushing), storage and distribution of ground barite, primarily for the US market. The material that would be purchased from abroad is raw barite, dutiable at $1.25 per metric ton.

FTZ procedures could excempt the company from customs duty payments on the foreign component used in export production. The company anticipates that less than 1% of the plant's shipments will be exported. On its domestic sales, Excalibur would be able to choose the duty rate during customs entry procedures that applies to the ground barite (duty free) for the foreign input noted above. FTZ designation would further allow Excalibur to realize logistical benefits through the use of weekly customs entry procedures, as well as savings from the elimination of duties on materials that become scrap/waste during manufacturing. The application indicates that the FTZ-related savings would help improve the facility's international competitiveness.

To read more, please visit Import Industry News.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Fremont tries home-grown stimulus help

FREMONT — City leaders hope a package of incentives they have crafted can jump-start business activity in Fremont.

The incentives can’t come soon enough for the city’s sizable small-business sector, said Dirk Lorenz, owner of Fremont Flowers and Gifts in the city’s Centerville district. A former member of the Fremont Chamber of Commerce’s board of directors, Lorenz said many small-business owners tell him their revenue has dropped 20 percent to 30 percent compared with last year.

City officials hear their pleas. Like their counterparts in the federal government and cities such as Boston, San Francisco and even the tiny burg of Lakeport near Clear Lake, members of the Fremont City Council approved a stimulus package March 3 as a way to counteract one of the worst economic downturns.

The package contains temporary and permanent provisions, including reducing developer impact fees, deferring the collection of those fees, exempting cleantech firms from paying the city’s business license tax, and increasing the city’s efforts to purchase products and services from Fremont businesses. The fee reductions and exemptions for business in the city of will remain in effect until at least Dec. 31, 2011.

Another proposal is to establish a foreign trade zone that would assist the city’s manufacturing sector. If approved the regulations would allow foreign and domestic goods to be brought in without formal customs entry or incurring customs duties, excise taxes or tariffs.

To read the entire article, visit the San Jose Business journal here.